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Utility of electronic patient records in primary care for stroke secondary prevention trials

Utility of electronic patient records in primary care for stroke secondary prevention trials
Utility of electronic patient records in primary care for stroke secondary prevention trials
BACKGROUND: This study aimed to inform the design of a pragmatic trial of stroke prevention in primary care by evaluating data recorded in electronic patient records (EPRs) as potential outcome measures. The study also evaluated achievement of recommended standards of care; variation between family practices; and changes in risk factor values from before to after stroke.

METHODS: Data from the UK General Practice Research Database (GPRD) were analysed for 22,730 participants with an index first stroke between 2003 and 2006 from 414 family practices. For each subject, the EPR was evaluated for the 12 months before and after stroke. Measures relevant to stroke secondary prevention were analysed including blood pressure (BP), cholesterol, smoking, alcohol use, body mass index (BMI), atrial fibrillation, utilisation of antihypertensive, antiplatelet and cholesterol lowering drugs. Intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC) were estimated by family practice. Random effects models were fitted to evaluate changes in risk factor values over time.

RESULTS: In the 12 months following stroke, BP was recorded for 90%, cholesterol for 70% and body mass index (BMI) for 47%. ICCs by family practice ranged from 0.02 for BP and BMI to 0.05 for LDL and HDL cholesterol. For subjects with records available both before and after stroke, the mean reductions from before to after stroke were: mean systolic BP, 6.02 mm Hg; diastolic BP, 2.78 mm Hg; total cholesterol, 0.60 mmol/l; BMI, 0.34 Kg/m2. There was an absolute reduction in smokers of 5% and heavy drinkers of 4%. The proportion of stroke patients within the recommended guidelines varied from less than a third (29%) for systolic BP, just over half for BMI (54%), and over 90% (92%) on alcohol consumption.

CONCLUSIONS: Electronic patient records have potential for evaluation of outcomes in pragmatic trials of stroke secondary prevention. Stroke prevention interventions in primary care remain suboptimal but important reductions in vascular risk factor values were observed following stroke. Better recording of lifestyle factors in the GPRD has the potential to expand the scope of the GPRD for health care research and practice.
1471-2458
Dregan, A.
392a61a5-b1a1-4d41-87c3-18e3984b10b2
Toschke, M.A.
886d0be5-5151-4f49-97c9-6c77e254ab04
Wolfe, C.D.
37e15c30-7fc3-45f8-942b-d393143127fc
Rudd, A.
4984b58f-2169-4836-8140-f08cacdbb14d
Ashworth, M.
a70c436c-8405-4518-806d-1003fd9d5386
Gulliford, M.C.
443b6214-b206-405a-b13b-b93541e2defc
Grieve, A.
957dc084-75d0-425b-9c97-ac8ffbf7630e
Little, P.
1bf2d1f7-200c-47a5-ab16-fe5a8756a777
Moore, M.
1be81dad-7120-45f0-bbed-f3b0cc0cfe99
McDermott, L.
5e895229-decd-4a30-8d08-dd9cc5b8f443
van Staa, T.
7e263d59-ecc2-41f2-8b20-3f934d09c2c9
Taweel, A.
80b62335-76dd-4ee7-bc66-aabf6c80e2a3
Yardley, L.
64be42c4-511d-484d-abaa-f8813452a22e
eCRT Research Team
Dregan, A.
392a61a5-b1a1-4d41-87c3-18e3984b10b2
Toschke, M.A.
886d0be5-5151-4f49-97c9-6c77e254ab04
Wolfe, C.D.
37e15c30-7fc3-45f8-942b-d393143127fc
Rudd, A.
4984b58f-2169-4836-8140-f08cacdbb14d
Ashworth, M.
a70c436c-8405-4518-806d-1003fd9d5386
Gulliford, M.C.
443b6214-b206-405a-b13b-b93541e2defc
Grieve, A.
957dc084-75d0-425b-9c97-ac8ffbf7630e
Little, P.
1bf2d1f7-200c-47a5-ab16-fe5a8756a777
Moore, M.
1be81dad-7120-45f0-bbed-f3b0cc0cfe99
McDermott, L.
5e895229-decd-4a30-8d08-dd9cc5b8f443
van Staa, T.
7e263d59-ecc2-41f2-8b20-3f934d09c2c9
Taweel, A.
80b62335-76dd-4ee7-bc66-aabf6c80e2a3
Yardley, L.
64be42c4-511d-484d-abaa-f8813452a22e

Dregan, A., Toschke, M.A., Wolfe, C.D., Rudd, A., Ashworth, M., Gulliford, M.C., Grieve, A., Little, P., Moore, M., McDermott, L., van Staa, T., Taweel, A. and Yardley, L. , eCRT Research Team (2011) Utility of electronic patient records in primary care for stroke secondary prevention trials. BMC Public Health, 11 (86). (doi:10.1186/1471-2458-11-86). (PMID:21299872)

Record type: Article

Abstract

BACKGROUND: This study aimed to inform the design of a pragmatic trial of stroke prevention in primary care by evaluating data recorded in electronic patient records (EPRs) as potential outcome measures. The study also evaluated achievement of recommended standards of care; variation between family practices; and changes in risk factor values from before to after stroke.

METHODS: Data from the UK General Practice Research Database (GPRD) were analysed for 22,730 participants with an index first stroke between 2003 and 2006 from 414 family practices. For each subject, the EPR was evaluated for the 12 months before and after stroke. Measures relevant to stroke secondary prevention were analysed including blood pressure (BP), cholesterol, smoking, alcohol use, body mass index (BMI), atrial fibrillation, utilisation of antihypertensive, antiplatelet and cholesterol lowering drugs. Intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC) were estimated by family practice. Random effects models were fitted to evaluate changes in risk factor values over time.

RESULTS: In the 12 months following stroke, BP was recorded for 90%, cholesterol for 70% and body mass index (BMI) for 47%. ICCs by family practice ranged from 0.02 for BP and BMI to 0.05 for LDL and HDL cholesterol. For subjects with records available both before and after stroke, the mean reductions from before to after stroke were: mean systolic BP, 6.02 mm Hg; diastolic BP, 2.78 mm Hg; total cholesterol, 0.60 mmol/l; BMI, 0.34 Kg/m2. There was an absolute reduction in smokers of 5% and heavy drinkers of 4%. The proportion of stroke patients within the recommended guidelines varied from less than a third (29%) for systolic BP, just over half for BMI (54%), and over 90% (92%) on alcohol consumption.

CONCLUSIONS: Electronic patient records have potential for evaluation of outcomes in pragmatic trials of stroke secondary prevention. Stroke prevention interventions in primary care remain suboptimal but important reductions in vascular risk factor values were observed following stroke. Better recording of lifestyle factors in the GPRD has the potential to expand the scope of the GPRD for health care research and practice.

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Published date: 7 February 2011
Organisations: Primary Care & Population Sciences, Psychology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 350026
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/350026
ISSN: 1471-2458
PURE UUID: f5698664-4c6f-4c0e-8e29-7f2064e45642
ORCID for P. Little: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3664-1873
ORCID for M. Moore: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5127-4509
ORCID for L. Yardley: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3853-883X

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Date deposited: 15 Mar 2013 12:44
Last modified: 12 Jul 2024 01:42

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Contributors

Author: A. Dregan
Author: M.A. Toschke
Author: C.D. Wolfe
Author: A. Rudd
Author: M. Ashworth
Author: M.C. Gulliford
Author: A. Grieve
Author: P. Little ORCID iD
Author: M. Moore ORCID iD
Author: L. McDermott
Author: T. van Staa
Author: A. Taweel
Author: L. Yardley ORCID iD
Corporate Author: eCRT Research Team

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